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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Push treaties to bring convicted OFWs home— Chiz

Senator Francis Escudero has asked the Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) to pursue treaties that would allow convicted Filipinos abroad to serve their prison term in the Philippines.

In his interpellation during the 2024 proposed budget of the DMW, Escudero stressed the need to prioritize this undertaking in the DMW agenda “in the spirit of giving second chances” for our convicted countrymen or even those classified as “detention prisoners.”

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To date, the DMW said there are some 1,254 overseas Filipino workers (OFWS) in prison broken down as follows: 293 in Asia-Pacific,; 7 in Europe; and 954 in the Middle East.

“I remember when there was a Spanish national in the Philippines who was imprisoned for allegedly killing someone in Cebu, and the very first thing Spain did was to negotiate and try to enter into a treaty with the Philippines with respect to prisoner exchange,” Escudero said.

The senator was referring to case of Francisco Larrañaga in Cebu involving the abduction of sisters Marijoy and Jacqueline Chiong on July 16, 1997 outside Ayala Center.

The sensational case became known as the “trial of the decade” in the Visayas due to the prominence of the suspects, including Larrañaga, whose mother was a cousin of the late Cebu governor Emilio Osmeña.

The case, Escudero noted, prompted the Spanish government to have the Treaty of Sentenced Persons Agreement (TSPA) signed between the Philippines and Spain on May 18, 2007 that was also ratified on the same year by the Senate.

“Given that we have so many OFWs, whose victims maybe a fellow Filipino working abroad or a foreign national, wouldn’t it be an opportune time for the Philippines to have been doing this similar thing?” Escudero asked.

The TSPA with Spain paved the way to the Philippines having similar agreements with the United Kingdom (UK), Thailand and Hong Kong.

The treaty allows individuals sentenced in another country to opt to serve their sentences in their native country. This means that Filipinos convicted in the UK can now choose to serve their remaining sentences in the Philippines.

“It would be a different matter for us to succeed or get that treaty, your Honor. But at the very least, we should pursue especially in the Middle East and Southeast Asia where we have a huge number of Filipinos. The difference if we have this treaty, there’s a chance will be served in the Philippines.

“If an OFW is convicted, let us say to suffer the penalty of 30-year incarceration in Saudi Arabia for example, and the family is poor, the next time they see each other will be 30 years after already because I doubt if the family can visit him every year and spend that much to travel. And they are not even sure if they can see the convicted relative whenever they do visit that place,” he added.

Escudero recalled that during last year’s budget deliberation, he had brought the subject matter to then Migrant Workers Secretary Susan Ople, who committed to work on it.

“I think in the spirit of giving second chances and enabling our Filipino compatriots who have been convicted in a foreign land justly or unjustly, for this to be pursued through the DMW and the DFA. I asked this during the previous deliberation with the late Secretary Ople who committed to do this,” he said. 

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